Disk Error 7 Event Log
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(עברית)المملكة العربية السعودية (العربية)ไทย (ไทย)대한민국 (한국어)中华人民共和国 (中文)台灣 (中文)日本 (日本語) HomeWindows 10Windows 10 MobilePrevious versionsMDOPSurfaceSurface HubLibraryForums Ask a question Quick access Forums home Browse forums users FAQ Search related threads Remove From My Forums Answered by: Event ID 7- disk Windows Vista IT Pro > Windows Vista Applications Question 0 Sign in event viewer disk error 7 to vote I was looking today at my client's System Event Log (Windows Vista
Event Viewer Disk Error 11
Business) and foundError - Event ID 7 - disk (The device has a bad block) that happens every day 1-2 times
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for more than a month. According tothe article http://www.microsoft.com/technet/support/ee/transform.aspx?ProdName=Windows+Operating+System&ProdVer=5.2&EvtID=7&EvtSrc=disk&LCID=1033: "Explanation The device has a bad block of memory, which Windows attempted to read. The data might be missing or corrupted. User Action If this
Windows 7 Check Disk Results
event is logged regularly, replace the hard disk drive." However, when I go to Control Panel-System-Device Manager-Disk Drive-Disk C - I read "Device is working Properly"In addition, in Control Panel-Administrative Tools-Computer Management-Storage-Disk Management I read "Disk 0-Heathy".System has only Disk C, no disk in CD/DVD drive or USB.I do not know what to recommend my customer. Shall he replace the disk according to Event ID recommendation, or ignore it and event id 7 bad block rely on Healthy status? Please advice, or share your thoughts about this dilemma. Thanks Saturday, January 30, 2010 2:26 AM Reply | Quote Answers 1 Sign in to vote You may want to check S.M.A.R.T. data on the hard drive in question. This should provide information about hard drive's health and status according to the device itself. The S.M.A.R.T. data can sometimes be read in BIOS or in diagnostic utilites that may come with the PC (if it's Dell for example the built-in diagonostic tools are capable of reading S.M.A.R.T. data).You may also use a freeware utility for Windows called Speedfan to access the information.If the drive is failing according to S.M.A.R.T. then it's time to replace it. Even though you can mark the "damaged" portions of the disk and make operating system no to use them, it's likely that this "hole" will get bigger. Marked as answer by Dale QiaoModerator Monday, March 08, 2010 2:57 AM Sunday, February 07, 2010 1:47 PM Reply | Quote 0 Sign in to vote Thanks, I was going to try that tomorrow.I am not sure about the precedence - what I shall put first - Event system or HW utilities. Marked as answer by NadiaSz Monday, March 15, 2010 12:37 PM Sunday,
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Sofware SimplifyEm Property management software helps property managers, landlords and real estate investors to manage rental property online. Manage your finances and collect your rent online using SimplifyEm property management software. New Lab System https://community.spiceworks.com/topic/28640-identify-disk-from-error-in-event-viewer Setting up a Server 2012 Data center system to act as a Hyper-V test bench and an off-site backup. MDT Deployment Designing custom MDT based Windows Deployment Images. TECHNOLOGY IN THIS DISCUSSION Join the Community! http://www.computerperformance.co.uk/ezine/BestPractice/BestPractice77.htm Creating your account only takes a few minutes. Join Now How do I identify a disk from an error in the Event Viewer. For example: \Device\Harddisk0\DR0 \Device\Scsi\symmpi1 The server has about three external drives event id and some scsi internal drives. Thank you Reply Subscribe View Best Answer RELATED TOPICS: Event Viewer Error Meaning Event Viewer error Event Viewer   13 Replies Datil OP DigitalBlacksmith Dec 3, 2008 at 9:42 UTC What is the error?, \Dev\Harddisk0\DR0 would suggest the first disk controller you see listed in disk manager. Check Disk management tool for any apparent issues, that should give you the details you want event id 7 on these two items. Is there an error in specific? 0 Anaheim OP Othni Dec 3, 2008 at 10:10 UTC EVENT # 6433 EVENT LOG System EVENT TYPE Error SOURCE symmpi EVENT ID 9 COMPUTERNAME DELL1750 TIME 11/18/2008 4:22:05 PM MESSAGE The device, \Device\Scsi\symmpi1, did not respond within the timeout period. EVENT # 6434 EVENT LOG System EVENT TYPE Warning SOURCE Disk EVENT ID 51 COMPUTERNAME DELL1750 TIME 11/18/2008 4:22:05 PM MESSAGE An error was detected on device \Device\Harddisk0\DR0 during a paging operation. The "R" in "DR0" I have heard it means removable. I am not that worried about the errors, but would like to know of a disk tool that maps these description with the corresponding drive letter. 0 Datil OP DigitalBlacksmith Dec 3, 2008 at 10:36 UTC Oh in that case sysinternals used to have a nice utility called winobj. Everest might do it as well. Personally I just use the disk manager to do all this. 0 Anaheim OP Othni Dec 3, 2008 at 10:50 UTC The Disk Manager does not relates the \Dev\Harddisk0\DR0 to the drive or partition. This is the problem. If you have several external disks and several scsi disks in different controllers, it would be a pro
Failure - The Best Kept SecretThe average hard disk lasts for three years. That was a disaster recovery statistic that I read, and am still absorbing. The secret is that no computer manufacturer, or disk supplier, will admit to disk problems, if they came clean their market share would collapse. You never see a sticker on a new computer saying, 'Warning - The disk may fail and you will lose all your data'.Frankly, until my recent battles with my own server, I did not believe that disks were so unreliable. My message to you is this, learn from my mistakes, or else you are destined to repeat them. Don't be like me and ignore valuable clues. From an unexpected source, I had the tip-off that disk failure is a wide-spread occurrence, but I choose foolishly to ignore the evidence. In the last four years I have sold over 8,000 ebooks. Almost every week someone writes to me saying that their disk failed, they lost my ebook and could I send them a replacement. At first I thought these were people attempting a scam to get a free ebook; invariably they could not remember their clickbank or paypal receipt number. However, when I checked their email address against my receipts, incredibly, every single request was from a genuine purchaser. These were not scam merchants, but people who had bought an ebook, so naturally, I sent them another copy. Foolishly, I still dismissed the disk problem, my twisted mind thought along these lines, 'These people have just lost their ebook, and thus to hype up my sympathy, they pretend their disk failed'. I am now ashamed of such thoughts; my only consolation is that I always sent a replacement ebook.For at least 15 years I have lived a charmed life, none of my machines have displayed any hint of hard disk problem. My old mate 'Barking' Eddie summed up the situation with the inelegant but descriptive phrase, 'Guy, these days manufacturers tune disks to nackerdness'. Eddie and I then reminisced how we used to tune Mini Cooper S engines to achieve incr